One of the most unique modulation features in Sculpture are the two…control envelopes.…So we have Envelope 1 and Envelope 2 down here.…These can function like a normal ADSR envelope or we can use a MIDI controller…to record the shape of the envelope.…Right now, I want to explore the envelope just in the normal Envelope mode.…So what I'm going to do is go ahead and set up our sound. Then I'll set the…Target for this envelope--so that's what our envelope is going to modulate--and…then we'll set up the envelope shape.…

So I'll play a note on the keyboard and I'm going to adjust the Media Loss…because I want more sustain to this sound. (music playing)…There we go! And I will adjust the Strength of Object 1, just so we can get a little bit more intensity.…(music playing) So that sounds good.…So now here we have the targets for this envelope.…So I've got Target 1 and Target 2.…These both apply to Envelope 1.…So, I can set two destinations or two things to modulate with this envelope.…So I'll go ahead and turn on Target 1 by pressing the 1 button.…

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Author

Updated

3/14/2012

Released

11/10/2011

Join author Brian Trifon as he shows how to improve music and audio productions using virtual instruments in Logic Pro. This course tours the program's virtual instruments, including the ES2 hybrid synthesizer, Sculpture physical modeling synthesizer, EFM1 FM synthesizer, the EVOC 20 vocoder, the Ultrabeat drum synthesizer, and the EXS24 sampler, and shows how to achieve various effects with each instrument's parameters. The course also covers working with oscillators and filters, understanding signal flow, creating custom synthesizer patches, adding effects, synthesizing speech, creating a library of custom sound samples, and much more.

Virtual Instruments with Logic Pro will be updating on a monthly basis, eventually covering all the virtual instruments in the application. Look for the latest movies here and on the lynda.com blog.